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Customer Connections: New Strategies for Growth Hardcover – September 1, 1997
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length267 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarvard Business Review Press
- Publication dateSeptember 1, 1997
- Dimensions6.42 x 1.09 x 9.47 inches
- ISBN-100875847994
- ISBN-13978-0875847993
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Editorial Reviews
From the Back Cover
With a fine blend of case examples and a practical framework for managers, Wayland and Cole make a compelling case for putting customer relationships at the center of the strategy dialogue. --George Day, Geoffrey T. Boisi Professor at the Wharton School, The University of Pennsylvania
Here, in one place, is all you need to know about winning the battle for the customer in the Information Age. Readers will find Customer Connections both a call--and an invaluable guide--to action. --David Marshall, Chief Information Officer and Senior Managing Director, Bankers Trust
Whether you are a Fortune 1000 manager or an entrepreneur, Customer Connections is a must-read. Wayland and Cole have written a definitive, customer-based strategy text that helps you fundamentally rethink your business and provides the tools you need to maximize return on the customer relationship. --Lois H. Benedetti, Ph.D., Director, Business Planning and Strategy, GTE Long Distance
For those of us who are equally and simultaneously disciples of relationship marketing' and proponents of shareholder value creation, Wayland and Cole have bridged the chasm, delivering powerful insights and balance in a clear, strategic format. A very useful book. --Charles L. Watkins, President, DukeSolutions, Duke Energy's Integrated Energy Services Company
Wayland and Cole offer a solid model grounded in real-world experience. This is a clear, logical way of working through relationship strategies. --Susan Cook, Director, Corporate Product Marketing, Hewlett-Packard Company
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Harvard Business Review Press
- Publication date : September 1, 1997
- Edition : First Edition, 7th Printing
- Language : English
- Print length : 267 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0875847994
- ISBN-13 : 978-0875847993
- Item Weight : 1.35 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.42 x 1.09 x 9.47 inches
- Customer Reviews:
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- Reviewed in the United States on August 13, 1998Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseThis is NOT a book for everyone - it is complex and takes time to fully absorb, but it is worth reading as there are numerous practical observations of how to look at customer interactions. I used it for my PhD and this is the level at which this book is best considered - if you know your stuff then this is worth buying - amateurs keep your money (for more Phantom comics)
- Reviewed in the United States on April 23, 2015Format: HardcoverThis book provides a framework to help you think of your relationships with your customers and thus the strategy.
1. Do you want to treat and communicate with your customer individually, as a group, or as a whole?
Nowadays, technologies enable personalizations, but do you need to?
2. Do you want to provide a product or a solution?
3. Are you part of your buyers' value chain?
How are your products being used by your buyers?
4. How much will you help share the risks from your customers?
This discussion is similar to the contract type determination.
The author tried to use the NPV (net present value) model to measure the equity from customer relationships. The values of a company come from the customer relationships, which determine the potential future cash flow. I like the way how they think.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 16, 2001Format: HardcoverI like books that combine qualitative and quantitative techniques to describe what must be done. Customer Connections takes on the challenge of providing that perspective.
The book's basic point is that logical thinking can be applied to developing better economic results through analyzing and pursuing the potential of different ways to have relationships with various customers. For example, some customers buy more, more often, and of higher margin products or services. Find ways to attract more of their business and your enterprise is going to be more profitable and valuable. An example of Scrub-a-Dub the car wash company explores this idea.
You are encouraged to think through this opportunity by analyzing your mix of customers, the ways that you can add value for these customers, the risk involved in acquiring them, and ways of sharing risks and rewards with customers and suppliers. Then, you create a solution that combines all four elements to produce more economic value (discounted cash flow) for your company.
To do this, you are going to need to know more about your customers than many companies know today, keep them better informed about what you are doing, and use technology to strengthen your connections in economically beneficial ways. So, there's a basic knowledge management issue to be resolved.
Like many consultants, the authors propose a complicated model that requires lots of data-gathering, analysis, building of new data bases, and improved IT systems. Ultimately, the benefits can only be estimated in advance. A set of interviews with 200 Fortune 1000 executives suggests that knowing more about customers is associated with higher growth.
In the last four years I have done a lot of research into ways that companies have changed their business models to be more successful. In that research, I was struck that the kinds of thinking described in this book were hardly ever used. So although there are lots of examples in the book of applying these concepts, I really wonder if the process to be followed is the one described here. Ultimately, the book's process reminded me of the kind of mechanical "left-brained" planning that failed for so many companies in doing their strategic thinking. The methods I have seen used were based much more on inexpensive experiments, gut feel, and rapidly rolling out the successes. The approach here is more of the opposite. Find something that should be great. Make a big bet on it. Keep your fingers crossed that your one expensive experiment will work.
The value thinking in the book is also very primitive, basically only describing the expected discounted cash flow. Every enterprise has many different economic values at a given time (depending on its value form), and expected discounted cash flow is only one. You could have removed all of the "value" references and equations in this book and not lost very much.
Ultimately, I was concerned about the book's basic concept -- that you should be customer-based in your thinking rather than customer-driven or customer-led. Being customer-based in doing value calculations can be very misleading. Few market innovations have followed from understanding customer profitability better. You still have to understand customers better . . . as they see and feel themselves.
Create more beneficial results for all those you meet!
- Reviewed in the United States on January 1, 2002Format: HardcoverCustomer connection
After reading this book, you will know what is the customer relationship model, that is the value compass and foundation of customer connection strategy.
I do agree that the author did present the book in an academic way which is quite bored. For the value compass, it is a complicated model and it is not easy to be understood. However, I remember that the author did distinguish the difference among the product manager, process manager and the network manager, this part is quite good and clear.
Also the author did explain the customer equity by using the equation, it¡¦s quite good and impressed.
Generally, I think you can learn something from this book, for example, we know that we need to create long term relationship with our customers and the critical success factor for running a business is to create value to the customers but not to reduce cost for the business.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2001Format: HardcoverNo doubt these guys are experts in their field, but their process of reducing customer relationships to mathematical equations does not work for me. Reading this book was laborious.
Even after having slogged through the whole book, I'm not sure that their point was anything more than "If a customer pays you more than it costs you to acquire and keep him, it's a good deal".
In the arena of CRM there are many more reader-friendly experiences out there.
Top reviews from other countries
- Vintage KerryReviewed in Canada on February 20, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Format: HardcoverVerified Purchaseno issues, professionally executed